miércoles, febrero 17, 2016

José Ramón López, heredero del aeropuerto de Boyeros y Cubana de Aviación, reclama sus propiedades. Jsé Ramón López es el único hijo de José López Vilaboy el accionista mayor de Cubna de Aviación y del Aeropuerto José Martí de La Habana Cuba. New York Times NYT Pact on U.S.-Cuba Flights Reopens Battle for Seized Property


 Heredero de aerolínea cubana y aeropuerto de Rancho Boyeros reclama compensación

José Ramón López, heredero del aeropuerto de Boyeros y Cubana de Aviación, reclama sus propiedades.

Martinoticias.com
febrero 16, 2016

El heredero de Cubana de Aviación

 Parte I



Parte II


El hijo del propietario del aeropuerto de Rancho Boyeros en La Habana, cuyas propiedades fueron confiscadas por la revolución cubana, declaró este martes que si las aerolíneas estadounidenses van a hacer negocios con Cuba a él hay que compensarlo, según publica el diario The New York Times.

José Ramón López, de 62 años, heredero del aeropuerto de La Habana y de la aerolínea nacional de Cuba, Cubana de Aviación, hasta 1959, dijo que se trata de su propiedad. "¿Cómo es que las empresas estadounidenses van a ir allí y beneficiarse de lo que me pertenece?"

López aseguró a Martí Noticias que busca el reconocimiento tanto por parte de Estados Unidos como de Cuba de su propiedad confiscada. Dijo además que no ha contactado a las aerolíneas estadounidenses que planean viajar a Cuba y que en breve se reunirá con abogados para estudiar sus posibilidades.

Casos similares de reclamación ocurrieron en la Republica Democrática Alemana (RDA) y Vietnam, dice Lopez, quien asegura que en esos casos se llegaron a acuerdos y compensaciones con las partes afectadas.

López estuvo como invitado a presentar su caso en el programa El Espejo, de Américateve,que conduce el periodista Juan Manuel Cao, y allí declaró que ya una corte de Miami le declaró como único heredero de su padre, el presidente y accionista mayor tanto de Cubana de Aviación como del aeropuerto de Boyeros. En el panel de El Espejo estuvo el abogado y analista político Marcel Felipe, quien declaró que bien puede demandar José Ramón López a cualquier empresa privada estadounidense que comercie con La Habana y haya confiscación de bienes privados.

López es el único hijo de José López Vilaboy, a quien le fueran intervenidas otras propiedades como el banco, un par de hoteles, incluidos el Jagua, de Cienfuegos y el Colina en La Habana, el diario Mañana, dos líneas aéreas y el aeropuerto ya mencionado, dice el diario de New York.

Su hijo, exiliado en Miami, dice hoy que la suya es una historia aleccionadora que pone de relieve los peligros de hacer negocios en Cuba. Se refiere a los conflictos sin resolver, durante décadas, entre Estados Unidos y el Gobierno de la isla. López es un ex marino mercante cubano que se fue de Cuba en 1989 y se trasladó a Miami hace siete años. Él tiene los papeles que demuestran que  es el único hijo de José López Vilaboy.

En una reunión en La Habana este martes, autoridades de Cuba y Estados Unidos firmaron un acuerdo de levantamiento de la prohibición de vuelos comerciales entre los dos países.
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José López Vilaboy y su hijo José Ramón

 José López Vilaboy, al centro, inaugurando los vuelos de Cubana de Aviación La Habana - New York  sin escala; lo acompañan el entonces Cónsul General de Cuba en New York y un alto funcionario de la Alcaldía de New York. copyrught de  www.corbisimages.com.

Acciones de José López Vilaboy
Motivos y Culpables de la Destruccion de Cuba, libro escrito por José López Vilaboy, el cual puede ser adquirido AQUÍ.


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Pact on U.S.-Cuba Flights Reopens Battle for Seized Property

By FRANCES ROBLES FEB. 16, 2016



José Ramón López, 62, the exiled heir to the Havana airport and to Cuba’s national airline, in his Miami home. Credit Angel Valentin for The New York Times


MIAMI — The Obama administration’s top transportation officials joined Cuban dignitaries at the Hotel Nacional in Havana on Tuesday to sign an agreement that will restore commercial airline service between the two countries for the first time in more than 50 years.

José Ramón López, 62, the exiled heir to the Havana airport and to Cuba’s national airline, was not invited.

This being Cuba, even a significant diplomatic announcement has a back story involving old wounds, confiscated properties and uphill legal battles.

Mr. López is the son of the former owner of the airport, whose property was seized by the Communists after the triumph of the Cuban revolution. He says he deserves compensation if the United States is going to agree to a commercial deal involving the airport with the government that stole his inheritance.

“The airport in Havana is private property — mine,” Mr. López said. “How are American corporations going to go there and benefit from it?”

Mr. López says his is a cautionary tale that highlights the perils of doing business in Cuba, where unresolved, decades-old disputes complicate efforts by Cuba and the United States to resume not only diplomatic relations but also economic ones.

Mr. López is a former Cuban merchant mariner who left Cuba in 1989 and moved to Miami seven years ago. He has paperwork showing that he is the only child of José López Vilaboy, an associate of Fulgencio Batista, the Cuban dictator who was overthrown in 1959.

Mr. López Vilaboy ran to safety on Dec. 31, 1958, when it became clear that a young bearded rebel named Fidel Castro had defeated the Batista forces and that the dictator would step down. Mr. López Vilaboy hid in the Guatemalan Embassy for nine months before fleeing the country; his properties were immediately seized.

Among his many holdings were a bank, a couple of hotels, factories, a newspaper, two airlines and Rancho Boyeros, the airport serving Havana now known as José Martí International.

As far as the new Cuban government was concerned, Mr. López Vilaboy’s many properties were the fruits of his close relationship to a corrupt regime.


Mr. López Vilaboy eventually arrived in South Florida, and he lived quietly in a two-bedroom apartment in Miami Beach until his death in 1989. He never saw his son after he left Cuba.

In 2010, a probate court in Miami declared Mr. López to be one of Mr. López Vilaboy’s heirs.

Over the years, he met with various lawyers, but he said they shrugged him off, viewing him as just one of the thousands of Cuban-Americans who lost property in the revolution — which they had little chance of ever getting back.

On Tuesday, the American secretary of transportation, Anthony Foxx, and the assistant secretary of state for economic and business affairs, Charles H. Rivkin, signed the agreement to restore commercial flights between the United States and Cuba at the Hotel Nacional with Cuba’s minister of transportation, Adel Yzquierdo.

By the fall, United States airlines will be able to operate 20 flights a day from the airport Mr. López still considers his.

“I just don’t understand how American corporations can do business with my property,” he said. “If they are not giving it to me, then pay me for using it.”

Mr. López enlisted Andy S. Gómez, a retired scholar of the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami, who helped him arrange meetings to explore legal recourse. “Americans need to understand the risks of doing business in Cuba,” Mr. Gómez said.

He said this moment was particularly crucial, as President Obama seeks to ease restrictions on doing business with Cuba and as more American companies flock there hoping to sign deals. Last week, the Obama administration approved the first American factory to operate in Cuba in more than 50 years, a small tractor company from Alabama.

The Helms-Burton Act, signed by President Bill Clinton in 1996, says that anyone who profits from properties that were confiscated from American citizens is liable for damages, even if the owner was not an American citizen at the time. Yet the law has provisos that allow the president to decide whether, for the sake of American interests, the law should be enforced.

It has pretty much never been enforced.

“It would be a slug fest,” said Pedro A. Freyre, a Miami lawyer who specializes in Cuban business deals. “It would be a brawl, a free-for-all, everyone suing every Canadian company, airline, hotel, you name it — and it would be detrimental to U.S. foreign relations.”

Martha Pantin, a spokeswoman for American Airlines, which is expected to bid for the Cuba routes, said Mr. López’s problem is one best answered by government agencies. “This is not an airline issue,” she said.

A State Department spokesman, who spoke on the condition of anonymity in keeping with department policy, said officials in the United States and their Cuban counterparts had touched on the topic during aviation talks. The department is negotiating with the Cubans over compensation for confiscated properties, but the cases of people who were not American citizens at the time of the confiscations were not included in those talks.

And unlike after the fall of the Berlin Wall, when heirs of property owners in the former East Germany received compensation for seized assets, the confiscators in Cuba are still in power.

“Claims issues have been one of our highest priorities since we re-established diplomatic relations with Cuba,” the State Department spokesman said.

The United States Department of Transportation said the administration could not stop people with legal judgments against the Cuban government from going to court to seize Cuban assets. But Mr. López does not have a judgment against the Cuban government or Cubana de Aviación, the national airline his father owned.

Even if he did, because of the many judgments by American courts against the Cuban government, Cubana de Aviación’s planes are not expected to start flying to the United States.

“We do not anticipate Cuban-owned aircraft serving the United States in the near future,” Thomas S. Engle, deputy assistant secretary for transportation affairs at the State Department, told reporters on a conference call last week.

He said negotiators were clear with Havana that the Obama administration would not be able to stop their planes from being seized by people who have successfully sued the Cuban government in American courts.

Andrew C. Hall, a Miami lawyer whose client won a $2.8 billion verdict against the Cuban government, considers himself first in line to seize Cuban planes should they try to land here.

“If it comes here, I’m going to go get it,” Mr. Hall said. “And if American Airlines at some point owes Cuba money, I will try to intercept that money.”

Mr. Hall said the United States government was unlikely to get involved in cases like Mr. López’s, because governments generally have a right to confiscate property. But the dispute could be among those that help push for a resolution, he said.

“Hopefully, as the political process begins to develop, Cuba will compensate its citizens for property it confiscated,” Mr. Hall said.

The Cuban government did not respond to a request for comment.

A version of this article appears in print on February 17, 2016, on page A4 of the New York edition with the headline: U.S.-Cuba Flight Pact Reopens Battle for Seized Property. Order Reprints| Today's Paper|Subscribe

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Tomado de http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/17/world/americas/us-cuba-flights-confiscated-property.html?_r=0

Pact on U.S.-Cuba Flights Reopens Battle for Seized Property

By FRANCES ROBLES FEB. 16, 2016


José Ramón López, 62, the exiled heir to the Havana airport and to Cuba’s national airline, in his Miami home. Credit Angel Valentin for The New York Times


MIAMI — The Obama administration’s top transportation officials joined Cuban dignitaries at the Hotel Nacional in Havana on Tuesday to sign an agreement that will restore commercial airline service between the two countries for the first time in more than 50 years.

José Ramón López, 62, the exiled heir to the Havana airport and to Cuba’s national airline, was not invited.

This being Cuba, even a significant diplomatic announcement has a back story involving old wounds, confiscated properties and uphill legal battles.

Mr. López is the son of the former owner of the airport, whose property was seized by the Communists after the triumph of the Cuban revolution. He says he deserves compensation if the United States is going to agree to a commercial deal involving the airport with the government that stole his inheritance.

“The airport in Havana is private property — mine,” Mr. López said. “How are American corporations going to go there and benefit from it?”

Mr. López says his is a cautionary tale that highlights the perils of doing business in Cuba, where unresolved, decades-old disputes complicate efforts by Cuba and the United States to resume not only diplomatic relations but also economic ones.

Mr. López is a former Cuban merchant mariner who left Cuba in 1989 and moved to Miami seven years ago. He has paperwork showing that he is the only child of José López Vilaboy, an associate of Fulgencio Batista, the Cuban dictator who was overthrown in 1959.

Mr. López Vilaboy ran to safety on Dec. 31, 1958, when it became clear that a young bearded rebel named Fidel Castro had defeated the Batista forces and that the dictator would step down. Mr. López Vilaboy hid in the Guatemalan Embassy for nine months before fleeing the country; his properties were immediately seized.

Among his many holdings were a bank, a couple of hotels, factories, a newspaper, two airlines and Rancho Boyeros, the airport serving Havana now known as José Martí International.

As far as the new Cuban government was concerned, Mr. López Vilaboy’s many properties were the fruits of his close relationship to a corrupt regime.


Mr. López Vilaboy eventually arrived in South Florida, and he lived quietly in a two-bedroom apartment in Miami Beach until his death in 1989. He never saw his son after he left Cuba.

In 2010, a probate court in Miami declared Mr. López to be one of Mr. López Vilaboy’s heirs.

Over the years, he met with various lawyers, but he said they shrugged him off, viewing him as just one of the thousands of Cuban-Americans who lost property in the revolution — which they had little chance of ever getting back.

On Tuesday, the American secretary of transportation, Anthony Foxx, and the assistant secretary of state for economic and business affairs, Charles H. Rivkin, signed the agreement to restore commercial flights between the United States and Cuba at the Hotel Nacional with Cuba’s minister of transportation, Adel Yzquierdo.

By the fall, United States airlines will be able to operate 20 flights a day from the airport Mr. López still considers his.

“I just don’t understand how American corporations can do business with my property,” he said. “If they are not giving it to me, then pay me for using it.”

Mr. López enlisted Andy S. Gómez, a retired scholar of the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami, who helped him arrange meetings to explore legal recourse. “Americans need to understand the risks of doing business in Cuba,” Mr. Gómez said.

He said this moment was particularly crucial, as President Obama seeks to ease restrictions on doing business with Cuba and as more American companies flock there hoping to sign deals. Last week, the Obama administration approved the first American factory to operate in Cuba in more than 50 years, a small tractor company from Alabama.

The Helms-Burton Act, signed by President Bill Clinton in 1996, says that anyone who profits from properties that were confiscated from American citizens is liable for damages, even if the owner was not an American citizen at the time. Yet the law has provisos that allow the president to decide whether, for the sake of American interests, the law should be enforced.

It has pretty much never been enforced.

“It would be a slug fest,” said Pedro A. Freyre, a Miami lawyer who specializes in Cuban business deals. “It would be a brawl, a free-for-all, everyone suing every Canadian company, airline, hotel, you name it — and it would be detrimental to U.S. foreign relations.”

Martha Pantin, a spokeswoman for American Airlines, which is expected to bid for the Cuba routes, said Mr. López’s problem is one best answered by government agencies. “This is not an airline issue,” she said.

A State Department spokesman, who spoke on the condition of anonymity in keeping with department policy, said officials in the United States and their Cuban counterparts had touched on the topic during aviation talks. The department is negotiating with the Cubans over compensation for confiscated properties, but the cases of people who were not American citizens at the time of the confiscations were not included in those talks.

And unlike after the fall of the Berlin Wall, when heirs of property owners in the former East Germany received compensation for seized assets, the confiscators in Cuba are still in power.

“Claims issues have been one of our highest priorities since we re-established diplomatic relations with Cuba,” the State Department spokesman said.

The United States Department of Transportation said the administration could not stop people with legal judgments against the Cuban government from going to court to seize Cuban assets. But Mr. López does not have a judgment against the Cuban government or Cubana de Aviación, the national airline his father owned.

Even if he did, because of the many judgments by American courts against the Cuban government, Cubana de Aviación’s planes are not expected to start flying to the United States.

“We do not anticipate Cuban-owned aircraft serving the United States in the near future,” Thomas S. Engle, deputy assistant secretary for transportation affairs at the State Department, told reporters on a conference call last week.

He said negotiators were clear with Havana that the Obama administration would not be able to stop their planes from being seized by people who have successfully sued the Cuban government in American courts.

Andrew C. Hall, a Miami lawyer whose client won a $2.8 billion verdict against the Cuban government, considers himself first in line to seize Cuban planes should they try to land here.

“If it comes here, I’m going to go get it,” Mr. Hall said. “And if American Airlines at some point owes Cuba money, I will try to intercept that money.”

Mr. Hall said the United States government was unlikely to get involved in cases like Mr. López’s, because governments generally have a right to confiscate property. But the dispute could be among those that help push for a resolution, he said.

“Hopefully, as the political process begins to develop, Cuba will compensate its citizens for property it confiscated,” Mr. Hall said.

The Cuban government did not respond to a request for comment.

A version of this article appears in print on February 17, 2016, on page A4 of the New York edition with the headline: U.S.-Cuba Flight Pact Reopens Battle for Seized Property. Order Reprints| Today's Paper|Subscribe